BOIS-CAIMAN-1791-CLUB ist auf und Mach mit !

H A I T I - APPEL an die Westlichen MEDIEN und anderen lobotomierten Afrikanischen MEDIEN: RESPEKTIERT UNSERE TOTEN !

H A I T I - APPEL an die Westlichen MEDIEN und anderen lobotomierten Afrikanischen MEDIEN: RESPEKTIERT UNSERE TOTEN !


BlackGlobalMediaWatch® gehört zum Bois-Caiman-1791-Club

[ Aus "Le Negropolitain". Wurde nach unserer Protestation entfernt. Eine Entschuldigung wurde ausgesprochen. ]


[ Aus (From) "San Francisco BAY VIEW: National Black Newspaper". Dieses selbsternannte Conscious Black Media ist offentsichlich nicht in der Lage die Problematik zu verstehen. Auch nach unserem Protestschreiben wurden etliche Bilder nicht entfernt... Was wir früher nur mit den eurozentristisch-rassifizierten Medien in Verbindung brachten(eine lange Traditoin aus der Kolonialzeit: Schwarz muss mit ELEND, ARMUT, KRANKHEIT, TOD, FAULHEIT, WILDHEIT, SPAß, etc. stets in Verbindung gebracht werden.), scheinen heute auch eine Spezialität lobotomierter Schwarzer/Afrikanischer Medien zu sein. ]

[ Dieses Bild gehört zu den ersten Bildern, die westliche Medien nach dem Erdbeben in Haiti verbreiteten. Wir hatten jedoch nicht mal ein einziges Bild der Opfer des WORLD TRADE CENTER nach seinem Sturz am 11. Sept. 2001 gesehen...]

[ Aus(From) "San Francisco BAY VIEW: National Black Newspaper" ]


HAI T I - Censured IMAGES by BlackGlobalMediaWatch® We call to the boycott of some pseudo conscious and lobotomised Black Media ! We must RESPECT our dead People!


BlackGlobalMediaWatch®
tritt entschieden dagegen auf !


28 .01. 2010

Bois-Caiman-Redaktion

H A I T I: Menschenhändler und Pädophilen nach Erdbeben aktiv - Kinder aus Krankenhäusern in Haiti verschleppt*

H A I T I: Menschenhändler und Pädophilen nach Erdbeben aktiv - Kinder aus Krankenhäusern in Haiti verschleppt*

[ Mehrere Europäer wurden im April 2007 im Tschad bei dem Versuch, 103 Jungen und Mädchen zu verschleppen, festgenommen. ]

[...]Nach Angaben des Kinderhilfswerks Unicef wurden bereits mindestens 15 Kinder aus Krankenhäusern entführt. Die Organisation fordert deshalb einen weltweiten Adoptionsstopp, bis die Lage übersichtlicher ist.

In Haiti drohen schutzlose Waisenkinder Opfer von Menschenhändlern zu werden. Das UN-Kinderhilfswerk Unicef sprach in Genf von 15 Kindern, die bereits aus Krankenhäusern verschwunden seien. Da Menschenhändler nach Naturkatastrophen umgehend aktiv würden, sollten Adoptionen von haitianischen Kindern weltweit ausgesetzt werden, verlangte Unicef.

„Wir haben derzeit Informationen über ungefähr 15 Kinder, die aus Krankenhäusern verschwunden sind, und zwar mit Menschen, die nicht zu ihrer Familie gehören“, sagte Unicef-Vertreter Jean-Luc Legrand vor Journalisten in Genf. Menschenhandel habe in Haiti schon vor der Erdbebenkatastrophe der vergangenen Woche existiert. „Diese Menschenhändler stehen mit dem internationalen Adoptionsmarkt in Verbindung“, warnte der Unicef-Mitarbeiter.

Es habe bereits eine ähnliche Situation nach dem Tsunami Ende 2004 in Asien gegeben. „Diese Netzwerke treten bei einer Katastrophe sofort in Aktion und nutzen die Schwäche des Staates und die schlechte Koordination der Handelnden vor Ort, um Kinder zu entführen und außer Landes zu bringen“, sagte Legrand.

Wegen dieser Erfahrung hatte die Unicef bereits am Donnerstagabend eine Aussetzung jeglicher Adoptionen für haitianische Kinder verlangt. Während diejenigen Kinder, bei denen die Formalitäten schon vor dem Erdbeben weitgehend abgeschlossen waren, schnell ausreisen sollten, müsse für alle anderen besondere Sorge getragen werden.

„Es werden alle Anstrengungen unternommen, um diese Kinder mit ihren Familien zusammenzuführen. Erst wenn sich das als unmöglich erweist, und wenn jeder einzelne Fall sorgfältig geprüft wurde, sollten die Behörden andere dauerhafte Lösungen wie Adoption ins Auge fassen“, erklärte Unicef-Generaldirektorin Ann Veneman in Paris.

In Haiti, wo Zehntausende bei dem verheerenden Erdbeben vom 12. Januar ums Leben kamen und Millionen obdachlos sind, wurden laut Unicef Aufnahmezentren für rund 900 Kinder eingerichtet, wo diese medizinisch versorgt, ernährt und psychologisch betreut werden.
Themen

„Unicef-Mitarbeiter suchen in Kinderheimen, Schulen, Lazaretten, Krankenhäusern und Notunterkünften nach unbegleiteten Kindern“, teilte das Hilfswerk am Freitag mit. Für Kleinkinder unter fünf Jahren würden an verschiedenen Stellen Schutzzonen eingerichtet. Es bestehe außerdem die Sorge, dass wegen der akuten Überlastung bereits Kinder aus Lazaretten entlassen wurden, obwohl keine Angehörigen sich um sie kümmern können.

*Titel und [...]: Bois-Caiman-Redaktion

27.01.2010

Source

Black Global Development Corps Helps Blacks To Participate During and After Disasters

Black Global Development Corps Helps Blacks To Participate During and After Disasters

Los Angeles, CA (BlackNews.com) -- According to Rosanita Ratcliff of the Black Global Development Corps, "Many African-Americans are overlooked during times of natural disasters. This was especially apparent during the Haiti earthquake disaster. News outlets showed White organizations and their members helping with victims, rescuing them from buildings, feeding them. But, where were the images of Blacks? It is a hot topic of discussion in the Black community. Black Global Development Corps is trying to solve that problem."

Rosanita Ratcliff, developer of the Black Global Development Corps found when talking to business owners and people who wish to volunteer that education and information were missing in the Black community. “Many wish to help in some way. They want to donate money and goods, help rebuild, and volunteer. The issue that arises is a lack of information. What are the necessary steps to volunteer during a disaster? Where can they get local training? Where are they welcome to volunteer? The Corps is not just for those who already have the skills and are ready at a moment‘s notice when a volunteer opportunity arises, but for those who wish to gain those same skills.”

The purpose of the Black Global Development Corps is to train people of African descent to help before, during and after natural disasters in the communities in which they reside and in other communities as well. The Black Global Development Corps disburses information on how to register as a minority owned business, how to register as a city, county, state and federal contractor, how to search for and find contracts, how to sign up as a business located in an empowerment zone, how to find trade missions, information regarding disaster relief training, donation and volunteer opportunities, and other educational information.

“We want to help protect the legacies and cultures of those affected by disasters and assist them with gaining the skills to truly compete in the global economic market.” Says Rosanita Ratcliff, co-founder of the Black Kinship Network and developer of the Black Global Development Corps.

The main focus of the Black Global Development Corps right now is earthquake relief in Haiti. The earthquake in Haiti on January 12, 2010 destroyed the infrastructure of Haiti, left millions homeless and killed over 100,000 people. The economic and social effects of the earthquake will be felt for years to come, not only in the Haitian community, but in the international community as well.

The Haitian Diaspora Marketplace sponsored by USAID sets aside over 2 million dollars for Haitian professionals in the Diaspora to return to Haiti and help invest in Haiti. The HDM was started in August 2009 and was not widely publicized.

"The Haitians throughout the world need to know that this fund exists. Especially in the wake of the earthquake. There are many professionals who wish to return and help rebuild. A part of me wants to the fund to be increased. If the fund is advertised, then perhaps more people will donate to it, allowing for more Haitians to participate in the rebuilding process," says Rosanita Ratcliff, writer of the petition.

The petition may be found at www.citizenspeak.org/node/1890, on Facebook through the petition application and at www.thepetitionsite.com/1/extend-the-haitiandiaspora-marketplace.

NAKO MITUNAKA _ by Kiamuangana Mateta [BOIS-CAIMAN-RadioTV]




NAKO MITUNAKA _ by Kiamuangana Mateta

Sprache: Lingala(Kongo)

Jahr: 70er

Dieses Lied ist eine Phänomenologie der Mentalen Dekolonisierung der Schwarzen Völker.

Hier ist die Transkription:

Aeee, ich frage mich
Ae, ich frage mich
Mein Gott,
Ich frage mich...

Woher kommt die Schwarze Haut? (bis)
Wer sind unsere ältesten Vorfahren?
Jesus, "Sohn Gottes" ist weiss
Adam und Eva sind auch weiss
Alle Engel sind auch weiss
Weswegen?

Aeee, ich frage mich
Ae, ich frage mich
Mein Gott
Ich frage mich(bis)

In den "religiösen Publikationen" stellen wir fest:
Alle Heiligen, die bildlich dargestellt sind, sind weiss
Alle Engel sind auch weiss
Aber der Teufel, er ist bildlich SCHWARZ!
Warum diese Ungerechtigkeit?

Aeee, ich frage mich
Ae, ich frage mich
Mein Gott
Ich frage mich(bis)

Woher kommt die Schwarze Haut? (bis)
Die Kolonisatoren haben unsere Intelligenz somit eingesperrt
Sie haben unsere traditionellen Statuetten desaouiiert
Sie verachten die Heilkunde unserer Vorfahren
Aber in der Kirche konstatieren wir:
Wir beten mit einer Rosenkranz in der Hand
Wir beten vor und unter den Statuetten
Aber alle dieser Statuetten stellen nur Weisse dar

Wir erkennen die Propheten der Weissen
Aber sie erkennen die Propheten der Schwarzen nicht
Mein Gott, warum hast du die Dinge so gestaltet?
Wo sind unsere Vorfahren, die Vorfahren der Schwaren Menschen?
Afrika ist aufgewacht
Afrika! weicht nicht zurück...



  • Übersezung aus Lingala ins Französische: ARDIN



  • Übersetzung aus dem Französichen ins Deutsche: Jean-Baptiste Pente


  • An brief english translation:


    by ApilOdokotek

    I am asking God. This black skin where did it come from? Jesus the son of God is white. Adam and Eve are white. All the phrohets are white. Even the angels are all white. But when it comes to the devil, he is black. This injustice where did it come from? God I ask, all white prophets we accept, but white people never accept black prophets. God, why is it this way? Africa, let us open our eyes. Lets go forwards with our eyes open. God, where is the black man's bible? God, I am just asking....


    La Traduction Francaise:

    par ARDIN

    A e, je m’interroge
    Ae, je m’interroge
    Mon Dieu,
    Je m’interroge

    D’où vient la peau noire? (bis)
    Qui est notre plus vieil ancêtre?
    Jesus, fils de Dieu est un blanc
    Adam et Eve sont eux aussi blancs
    Tous les Saints sont aussi blancs
    Pour quelles raisons?

    A e, je m’interroge
    Ae, je m’interroge
    Mon Dieu
    Je m’interroge (bis)

    Dans des publications religieuses, nous voyons que :
    Tous les Saints sont blancs sur les images
    Tous les anges sont aussi blancs
    Mais le Diable, il est noir en image!
    Pourquoi cette injustice?

    A e, je m’interroge
    Ae, je m’interroge
    Mon Dieu
    Je m’interroge (bis)

    D’ou vient la peau noire (bis)
    Les colonisateurs ont ainsi enferme notre intelligence
    Ils ont meconnu nos statuettes traditionnelles
    Ils ne reconnaissent pas notre medecine ancestrale
    Mais a l’eglise, nous constatons que
    Nous prions le chapelet a la main
    Nous prions au milieu des statues
    Mais ces statues ne representent que des Blancs

    Nous reconnaissons les prophetes des blancs
    Mais ils ne reconnaissent pas ceux des noirs
    Pourquoi, mon Dieu, tu nous as fait ainsi ?
    Ou est notre ancetre a nous hommes noirs ?
    L’Afrique a ouvert les yeux
    Afrique! ne recule plus...

    26.12.2006

    Randall Robinson: Bush Was Responsible for Destroying Haitian Democracy [BOIS-CAIMAN-RadioTV]

    “Bush Was Responsible for Destroying Haitian Democracy”–Randall Robinson on Obama Tapping Bush to Co-Chair US Relief Efforts Randall-robinson

    We speak with TransAfrica founder Randall Robinson, author of An Unbroken Agony: Haiti, from Revolution to the Kidnapping of a President. On President Obama tapping former President Bill Clinton and former President George W Bush to co-chair US relief efforts in Haiti, Robinson says, “Bush was responsible for destroying Haitian democracy…Clinton has largely sponsored a program of economic development that supports the idea of sweatshops… but that is not what we should focus on now. We should focus on saving lives.” [includes rush transcript]

    [Video: ]

    AMY GOODMAN: We have now with us on the line Ali Lutz, who is the Haiti program coordinator for the group Partners in Health that has clinics throughout Haiti.

    Ali, talk about the situation of aid.

    ALI LUTZ: Good morning, Amy. Thank you.

    The situation in Haiti is obviously extremely dire. And we are trying to get supplies and medical personnel into Port-au-Prince and to the clinics that Partners in Health helps run throughout the country to support the response, because obviously our colleagues in Haiti, our doctors, nurses, surgeons, they’re dealing with their own families during this tragedy and doing the best that they can also to help the victims.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: And Ali, in your contacts to get aid in, who, as far as you can tell right now, is in charge in Haiti? I know the US military now is in charge of the airport. But who do go to to try to get permission to bring your materials in?

    AMY GOODMAN: Ali, are you there?

    JUAN GONZALEZ: I think we’ve lost her there.

    AMY GOODMAN: The problems with Skype here. Well, we’ll go back to Ali Lutz after this conversation.

    But just before the program, I spoke with Randall Robinson. He’s the founder and past president of TransAfrica. He’s currently a visiting law professor at Pennsylvania State University, though he goes home to Saint Kitts tomorrow, where he lives. His most recent book is An Unbroken Agony: Haiti, from Revolution to the Kidnapping of a President. I began by just asking for his thoughts about the crisis right now in Haiti.
    RANDALL ROBINSON: It’s important, in trying to find ways to help, to be generous and to give, and to give generously. I would like to commend President Obama for his strong and fast response of a commitment of $100 million. Operations are already underway. I think the world is being incredibly generous, as I understand the pace of things to be at this point, the pace of giving. But, of course, as many lives as can possibly be salvaged need to be salvaged as quickly as possible, and I have every reason to believe that the administration and others are doing the very best that they can. As a private citizen, it’s my responsibility, and our general responsibility, to support every effort that’s being made to save lives in Haiti. AMY GOODMAN: Word is now President Préval has said they’ve just burned—buried 7,000 bodies in a mass grave, but the most important thing right now is the search equipment, to go in and to save people who are just hanging on, perhaps who have been crushed, who are hidden in the rubble. And yet, that has yet to come. Some word is there’s a lot of aid at the airport not able to get through, and then other aid just hasn’t come.
    RANDALL ROBINSON: Well, that’s not surprising. It’s hard for things to function when virtually all of the infrastructure has been destroyed. The Haitian government is unable to function, I would imagine, because it’s under the same burden that all Haitians are under. The President’s home has been destroyed. It’s hard to get from point A to point B, because the roads are blocked, petrol is not available. Heavy equipment is not yet available.

    But in the spirit of konbit, the Haitian Creole word for “collaboration and cooperation,” Haitians are doing everything they can. They are resilient, industrious, courageous people. They’re doing everything they can to save the lives of their fellows, and they’re doing it, thus far, with very little, because it’s taking a while for that kind of assistance to materialize.

    AMY GOODMAN: President Obama has tapped President Clinton and former President George W. Bush to coordinate the aid relief to Haiti. I was wondering your thoughts on that.

    RANDALL ROBINSON: Well, Amy, I’m, of course, troubled by that. I don’t think this is the time—neither the time nor the place to discuss those things that have troubled me for a long time in the history of American policy towards Haiti. Now the focus must be upon the rescue efforts that are underway to save lives.

    But I hope that this experience, this disaster, causes American media to take a keener look at Haiti, at the Haitian people, at their wonderful creativity, at their art, at their culture, and what they’ve had to bear. It has been described to the American people as a problem of their own making. Well, that’s simply not the case. Haiti has been, of course, put upon by outside powers for its whole post-slavery history, from 1804 up until the present.

    Of course, President Bush was responsible for destroying Haitian democracy in 2004, when he and American forces abducted President Aristide and his wife, taking them off to Africa, and they are now in South Africa. President Clinton has largely sponsored a program of economic development that supports the idea of sweatshops. Haitians in Haiti today make 38 cents an hour. They don’t make a high enough wage to pay for their lunch and transportation to and from work. But this is the kind of economic program that President Clinton has supported. I think that is sad, that these two should be joined in this kind of effort. It sends, I think, the wrong kind of signal. But that is not what we should focus on now. We should focus on saving lives.

    But in the last analysis, I hope that American media will not just continue to—the refrain of Haiti being the poorest country in the western hemisphere, but will come to ask the question, why? What distinguishes Haiti from the rest of the Caribbean? Why are the other countries, like the country in which I live, Saint Kitts, middle-income and successful countries, and Haiti is mired in economic despair? What happened? And who’s had a hand in it? If Haiti has been under a series of serial dictatorship, who armed the dictators? There are other hands in Haiti’s problem. Of course Haiti is responsible for some of its own failures, but probably not principally responsible. We need to know that. We need to be told the whole story of these wonderful, resilient, courageous and industrious people. And we have not been told that. I would hope that this would be an opportunity for doing so.

    AMY GOODMAN: In talking about President Bush, while most people may not know the role the US played in the ouster of President Aristide February 29th, 2004, probably what would come to mind when there’s any discussion of relief efforts is Katrina.

    RANDALL ROBINSON: Yes. The problem of what happened in February 2004 continues. We had democracy in Haiti, and that democracy was blighted by the Bush administration. And now President Aristide’s party is prohibited from participating in the electoral process. His party is the largest party in Haiti. And why should we be so afraid to let his party participate? If Haitian people don’t want them, they won’t vote for them. That is the very essence of democracy, that people get a chance to stand for election, and the electorate gets a chance to make a decision. But we have obstructed that process in Haiti. We have done that under the Clinton administration, under the Bush administration, and that continues under the Obama administration. And that is indeed unfortunate. I am imploring American media to examine this in whole part, in ways that media have failed to do so up until now.

    AMY GOODMAN: This history, the two crises, the natural catastrophe that is the earthquake, that the Red Cross is now saying they believe perhaps up to 50,000 people have died—and we’re not talking about, you know, just what has happened in the past, but what is currently happening. Who was just quoted? Lieutenant General Russel Honoré, the retired general who took charge of relief efforts in New Orleans, said that aid should have arrived, that said the US military should have arrived in earthquake-devastated Haiti twenty-four hours earlier. Of course, as we know, people trapped under rubble, every minute counts.

    RANDALL ROBINSON: Well, I’m not in a position to comment on that. I simply can’t make an assessment of how fast or how slowly they arrived or how soon they should have arrived. And so, I will withhold comment on that.

    AMY GOODMAN: Does it make you nervous to hear about US soldiers on Haitian soil? If you can share a little more of the history of the United States and Haiti—or do you think this isn’t the time to talk, for example, about 1915 to 1934, the first US Marine occupation, and then—

    RANDALL ROBINSON: Well, I should think it would—I should think, Amy, it would make Haitians nervous under these circumstances. Of course, I’m sure that they are, understandably, quite happy to see assistance from any quarter.

    But it was in 1915 that Woodrow Wilson, of course, with a force of American Marines, invaded and occupied Haiti until 1934. They seized land, redistributed it to American corporations, took control of the country, ran the country, collected customs duties for that period of time, and ran the country as if it were an American possession.

    But this has marked the relationship since Toussaint Louverture and an army of ex-slaves overthrew French rule in 1804. The French exacted, of course, reparations from the new free black republic of Haiti, bankrupting the country. The Vatican didn’t recognize Haiti until the 1860s. The Western nations of the world, responding to a call for isolation and embargo from Thomas Jefferson, imposed sanctions on Haiti that lasted until the Emancipation Proclamation in the United States, of course followed in the twentieth century by President Wilson’s occupation and then by the dictatorial blight of Duvaliers, Papa and son, and all of the other military generals that, of course, were armed by the United States.

    And so, Haiti’s plight up until this point has been, in some significant way, attributable to bad and painful American, French and Western policy that some believe is caused or described, motivated by Toussaint Louverture’s victory over Napoleon. The French have never forgiven the Haitian people for this.

    AMY GOODMAN: Former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide said he’s ready to return to help rebuild his country in the wake of the devastating earthquake. Why can’t he just return?

    RANDALL ROBINSON: Well, the—I’m not sure what the stated American policy is, but of course the Bush administration policy was to forbid his return. But any obstruction of his return by any power would constitute a violation of international law, a violation of the UN Charter, a violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a violation of any number of major UN human rights conventions. You cannot restrict people either from leaving their country—citizens, either from leaving their country or returning to their country. He has every right to return home, should he want to. And one would hope that no administration, the American administration nor any other, would stand in the way of his passage home.

    AMY GOODMAN: A few nights ago, Naomi Klein was in New York, author of The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, and she quoted a Heritage Foundation press release that came out very soon after the earthquake, talking about this being an opportunity. That is the question, whether it is an opportunity, she said, of the corporate vultures hovering over Haiti, waiting to descend and restructure Haiti, or an opportunity for progressive Haitians to rebuild their own country, to rebuild Haiti. What are your thoughts about this?

    RANDALL ROBINSON: Well, it’s an opportunity, I think, for the American people to, at long last, learn the full truth about Haiti and about our relationship with Haiti. They’ve known—they’ve been caused to know very little about it. And I think progress—a new beginning starts with the truth. That is a truth that has been suppressed for all of these many years. The American people know almost nothing about what happened in 2004, about the abduction of President Aristide, about the destruction of Haiti’s democracy as a result of the efforts of both the United States and the French government. We need to know that.

    And in the last analysis, Haitians have at their disposal a vigorous, creative, industrious and successful community in the United States, in France, in Canada. The Haitian diaspora is very much engaged with Haiti. They need to be given an opportunity to help Haiti rebuild itself.

    We need to go away from what we’ve been doing in support, a sort of an unconditional support, for wealthy Haitians that are running sweatshops in the country, that pay people appallingly low wages. That is not the way to any bright future for Haiti. And that is the—of course, the idea that former President Clinton has been advancing for Haiti. I think it is sad. It can’t work. It won’t work. It will brew a further resentment of the United States.

    And I think that the only way we can move ahead constructively with Haiti is to begin by telling the full story of our relationship with Haiti since 1804, what happened in the nineteenth century and what has happened in the twentieth century, so that Americans will understand at long last that Haiti’s misery is largely not of its own making. They will learn of a Haitian people who are quite different from those who have been described to them. And I think it is at that point we can make the beginning that we need to make and that is rooted in a policy that is constructive and sensitive and caring and productive for the United States, as well as for the Haitian people.

    AMY GOODMAN: Randall Robinson, founder and past president of TransAfrica. He fasted almost until death years ago under the Clinton administration to try to get President Clinton to close Guantanamo. In that case, it was to close Guantanamo so that Haitian refugees who were trying to escape the coup in Haiti were able to come into the United States. Randall Robinson’s latest book is called An Unbroken Agony: Haiti, from Revolution to the Kidnapping of a President.

    Focus on Haiti - The US-politics of rice [BOIS-CAIMAN-RadioTV]

    [ Condoleezza Rice: One of the Black Faces of WHITE SUPREMACY ]



    Focus on Haiti - The US- politics of rice

    24.10.2010

    Bois-Caiman-Radaktion


    H A I T I und KOLONIALES ERBE - Die Katastrophe in Haiti erschüttert viele Menschen guten Glaubens. Aber warum ist das Land so arm?

    H A I T I und KOLONIALES ERBE - Die Katastrophe in Haiti erschüttert viele Menschen guten Glaubens. Aber warum ist das Land so arm? - Reflexionen von Fidel Castro

    Fidel Castro veröffentlichte am Freitag eine »Reflexion« unter dem Titel »Die Lehre von Haiti«:

    Am Dienstag, kurz vor 18 Uhr kubanischer Zeit, als in Haiti wegen seiner geographischen Lage schon Nacht herrschte, begannen die Fernsehsender Nachrichten zu verbreiten, ein gewaltiges Erdbeben der Stärke 7,3 auf der Richter-Skala habe Port-au-Prince schwer getroffen. Das Beben sei nur 15 Kilometer entfernt von der haitianischen Hauptstadt, in der 80 Prozent der Bevölkerung in wackeligen Hütten aus Lehm und Ziegeln hausen, entstanden.

    Die Tragödie erschüttert viele Menschen guten Glaubens. Aber vielleicht sind es nur wenige, die daran denken, warum Haiti ein so armes Land ist. Warum hängt seine Bevölkerung zu fast 50 Prozent von den Überweisungen ab, die sie von Familienangehörigen im Ausland erhält? Warum wird nicht auch die Realität analysiert, die zu der gegenwärtigen Lage Haitis und seinem großen Leiden geführt hat?

    Das Interessanteste: Niemand verliert ein Wort darüber, daß Haiti das erste Land war, in dem sich 400000 von den Europäern verschleppte und versklavte Afrikaner gegen 30000 weiße Besitzer der Zuckerrohr- und Kaffeeplantagen erhoben und so die erste große soziale Revolution in unserer Hemisphäre durchführten. Haiti ist ein reines Produkt des Kolonialismus und Imperialismus, von mehr als einem Jahrhundert Ausbeutung seiner Menschen durch härteste Arbeit, von Militärinterventionen und der Entziehung seiner Reichtümer.

    Situationen wie die in diesem Land sollten nirgendwo auf der Erde herrschen. Aber aufgrund einer der Welt aufgezwungenen ungerechten internationalen politischen und Wirtschaftsordnung gibt es Zehntausende Städte und Siedlungen in gleicher und manchmal schlimmerer Lage. Die Weltbevölkerung wird nicht nur durch Naturkatastrophen wie jener in Haiti bedroht. Diese sind nur eine Ahnung dessen, was dem Planeten durch den Klimawandel geschehen könnte, der in Kopenhagen tatsächlich nur für Witze und Betrugsmanöver herhalten mußte.

    Es ist angebracht, allen Ländern und Institutionen, die Bürger oder Mitglieder durch die Naturkatastrophe in Haiti verloren haben, zu sagen: Wir haben keinen Zweifel, daß sie jetzt die größten Anstrengungen unternehmen, um Menschenleben zu retten und den Schmerz dieses leidenden Volkes zu lindern. Wir können sie nicht für das Naturphänomen verantwortlich machen, daß sich dort ereignet hat, obwohl wir mit der gegenüber Haiti verfolgten Politik nicht einverstanden sind. Aber ich kann nicht darauf verzichten, die Meinung zu äußern, daß es an der Zeit ist, wirkliche und wahrhaftige Lösungen für dieses Brudervolk zu suchen.

    Auf dem Gebiet der Gesundheitsversorgung und in anderen Bereichen hat Kuba, obwohl es ein armes und unter einer Blockade leidendes Land ist, seit Jahren mit dem haitianischen Volk zusammengearbeitet. Rund 400 Ärzte und Gesundheitsspezialisten bieten kostenlos ihre Dienste. an In 227 der 337 Kommunen des Landes arbeiten jeden Tag unsere Ärzte. Außerdem wurden nicht weniger als 400 junge Haitianer in unserem Heimatland als Ärzte ausgebildet. Sie werden jetzt mit der Verstärkung zusammenarbeiten, die am Mittwoch nach Haiti gereist ist, um in dieser kritischen Situation Leben zu retten. Ohne besondere Anstrengungen fanden sich fast 1000 Ärzte und Gesundheitsspezialisten, die sich auf den Weg gemacht haben und bereit sind, mit jedem anderen Staat zusammenzuarbeiten, der haitianische Leben retten und Verletzten helfen will.

    Eine weitere große Zahl von jungen Haitianern besucht derzeit noch diese Medizinerausbildung in Kuba. Wir kooperieren mit dem haitianischen Volk auch in anderen Bereichen.

    Die Chefin unserer medizinischen Brigade informierte in einer knappen Mitteilung, wenige Stunden nachdem sie mit einer Gruppe Ärzte in Port-au-Prince angekommen war: »Die Situation ist schwierig, aber wir haben bereits begonnen, Leben zu retten«. Spät in der Nacht setzte sie sich mit den kubanischen Ärzten und den in der Lateinamerikanischen Medizinschule ELAM ausgebildeten und im Land verteilten Haitianern in Verbindung. Allein in Port-au-Prince hatten sie bereits über 1000 Patienten behandelt, in aller Eile ein nicht eingestürztes Krankenhaus wieder in Betrieb genommen und dort, wo es nötig war, Zelte benutzt. Sie bereiteten sich darauf vor, so schnell wie möglich weitere Zentren zur Notfallbehandlung zu errichten.

    Wir sind stolz auf diese Zusammenarbeit, die die kubanischen Ärzte und die in Kuba ausgebildeten jungen haitianischen Ärzte in diesen tragischen Tagen ihren Schwestern und Brüdern in Haiti bieten.

    Übersetzung: André Scheer

    22.01.2010

    Bois-Caiman-Redaktion




    LESER-Briefe:

    Mehr Infos und Zusammenhänge waren nett

    von Holger Roloff

    Ich finde es ja toll, dass hier ein kritisch angehauchter Bericht zu Haiti erscheint. Hatte gerade bei NDR Info einen längeren Kommentar zu Haiti gehört, wo die Lage so dargestellt wurde, als wenn Haiti, weil sie sich so frühzeitig befreit hatten vom Kolonialismus, danach quasi nichts mehr selbst auf die Reihe gekriegt hätten...so nach dem Motto - tja hätten sie sich mal lieber frühzeitig dem Kapitalismus noch mehr zugewandt und ausbeuten lassen, dann würde es ihnen heute besser gehen. Das wurde zwar nicht so offen gesagt, aber so klang es letztlich für den Hörer durch... Dass das wohl so absolut gesehen falsch sein dürfte, ist naheliegend.

    Der hier genannte JW-Artikel spricht das Thema schon anders an, bringt nur leider Null wirklich relevante Fakten und Zusammenhänge, die mal gezeigt hätten, wie die Reproduktion in Haiti tatsächlich aussieht. Das hätte ich mir gewünscht. Ich vermute, dass die Wahrheit entweder ganz anders aussieht (z.B. Einfluss der USA) oder zumindest irgendwo in der Mitte liegt. Wenn (nur) ein ebenfalls relativ armes Land wie Kuba Haiti geholfen hat, ist es ja klar, dass Haiti nicht reich ist. Andererseits hätten die Menschen dort aber natürlich solange Optionen sich selbst eigenständig zu machen und ihren stofflichen Reichtum zu nutzen, wenn sie sich nicht auf das Kapital als Grundlage verlassen. Deshalb wäre es hilfreich gewesen zu erfahren, wie sie dort ggf. in internationale Wertschöpfungsketten eingebunden sind bzw. von Finanzgebern auch der Kolonialzeit in Abhängig gehalten wurden. Ich vermute jedenfalls stark, dass das der Fall ist.

    ------------

    Welt-Klassengesellschaft

    von Reinhold Schramm

    Eine soziale, ökologische und ökonomische Sanierung der Gesellschaft wäre möglich, nicht nur in Haiti. Die materiellen Mittel sind (weltweit) vorhanden. Laut einer UN-Studie umfasst das weltweite Vermögen rund 94.000 Milliarden Euro. Zwei Prozent der Weltbevölkerung besitzen mehr als die Hälfte des weltweiten Vermögens, mehr als 47.000.000.000.000 Euro Privatvermögen. Die ärmere Hälfte der erwachsenen Weltbevölkerung hat zusammen nur ein Prozent, rund 940 Mrd. Euro des Weltvermögens.

    Dabei reichte der Besitz von 1624 Euro bereits aus, um nicht mehr zur ärmeren Hälfte der (differenzierten) Weltgesellschaft zu gehören. Die reichsten zehn Prozent der Welt-Klassengesellschaft verfügen über 85 Prozent des Vermögens, über 79,9 Billionen Euro (79.900 Milliarden Euro) - differenziert. Das reichste Prozent der Welt-Klassengesellschaft, rund 37 Millionen Erwachsene, besitzen zusammen ca. 40 Prozent des weltweiten Vermögens, rund 37.600.000.000.000 Euro Privatvermögen (vor allem ein Ergebnis aus Ausbeutung, Raub und Unterwerfung).

    Von den reichsten zehn Prozent der Welt- Klassengesellschaft stammen 25 Prozent aus den USA, 20 Prozent aus Japan und aus der Deutschland AG rund 8 Prozent. Beim reichsten Prozent der Weltbevölkerung (40 % des Weltvermögens) führten die USA mit 37 Prozent (13.912 Milliarden Euro), Japan mit 27 Prozent (10.152 Milliarden Euro) und Deutschland mit 4 Prozent (1504 Milliarden Euro). Vor der (offiziellen) Finanz- und Wirtschaftskrise des Weltkapitals konzentrierten sich 90 Prozent des weltweiten Wohlstands auf Nordamerika (USA und Kanada), EU-Europa (u.a.), Japan, die Golfstaaten - und wenige asiatische Regionen.

    Rund 90 Prozent der Menschheit - vor allem auch aus der differenzierten (abhängigen) Lohnarbeit und damit realen Welt- Wertschöpfung - teilen sich (differenziert) nur 15 Prozent (14,1 Billonen Euro - von 94,0 Billionen Euro) des Weltvermögens. - Die Mehrheit der Menschheit ist von einer realen Teilhabe am Weltvermögen ausgeschlossen!
    Reinhold Schramm

    Aristide will nach Hause kommen - Der frühere Präsident von Haiti will beim Wiederaufbau seiner Heimat helfen

    Aristide will nach Hause kommen - Der frühere Präsident von Haiti will beim Wiederaufbau seiner Heimat helfen

    von André Scheer

    Der 2004 gestürzte Präsident von Haiti, Jean Bertrand Aristide, hat in seinem südafrikanischen Exil angekündigt, so schnell wie möglich in sein Heimatland zurückkehren zu wollen, um bei der Bewältigung der Folgen des verheerenden Erdbebens zu helfen. Begleitet von seiner sichtlich mit den Tränen kämpfenden Frau Mildred und einem hochrangigen Beamten des südafrikanischen Außenministeriums sagte Aristide am Freitag in Johannesburg, er könne es nicht erwarten, »wieder mit den Brüdern und Schwestern in Haiti zusammen zu sein«. Er fuhr fort: »Wir sind jederzeit bereit, heute, morgen oder irgendwann loszufliegen, um das Volk von Haiti zu unterstützen, sein Leiden zu teilen, beim Wiederaufbau des Landes zu helfen und es mit Würde aus dem Elend zu führen«.

    Der frühere katholische Priester und Anhänger der Befreiungstheologie gehörte in den 80er Jahren zur Widerstandsbewegung gegen den Diktator Jean-Claude Duvalier (»Baby Doc«). Nach dessen Sturz wurde Aristide 1990 als Kandidat der Bewegung »Lavalas« bei der ersten freien Wahl des Landes mit großer Mehrheit zum Präsidenten gewählt, doch bereits 1991 durch einen Putsch gestürzt. Obwohl die Clinton-Administration in Washington eine widersprüchliche Rolle bei diesem Staatsstreich gespielt hatte, intervenierten die USA 1994 und setzten Aristide erneut als Staatschef ein. 1996 gab er die Macht an seinen damaligen Premierminister René Préval ab, bevor er am 7. Februar 2001 in das Präsidentenamt zurückkehrte. Seine neue Amtszeit enttäuschte jedoch viele ehemalige Anhänger. Sie warfen Aristide Korruption und Mißwirtschaft vor. Die Protestbewegung gegen die Regierung wurde von Kräften der ehemaligen Duvalier-Diktatur und ihren Todesschwadronen unterwandert und teilweise gelenkt. Regierungsgegner und Anhänger Aristides lieferten sich gewaltsame Auseinandersetzungen. Als rechtsextreme Rebellen im Februar 2004 auf die Hauptstadt Port-au-Prince vorrückten, intervenierten die USA und Frankreich und stürzten Aristide. Während Washington erklärte, der Präsident habe freiwillig abgedankt, beschuldigte dieser die mittlerweile von George W. Bush regierten USA, ihn »entführt« zu haben. Ein französischer Rundfunksender strahlte damals ein Interview aus, in dem ein Augenzeuge die Aussagen des Geschaßten bestätigte: »Die US-Armee kam um zwei Uhr morgens, um ihn wegzubringen. Die Amerikaner haben ihn mit Waffen bedroht.« Die Korrespondentin der kanadischen Tageszeitung La Presse berichtete, Aristide seien Handschellen angelegt worden.

    Venezuelas Präsident Hugo Chávez, der im April 2002 selbst einen Putschversuch überstanden hatte, fühlte sich an die damaligen Ereignisse in Caracas erinnert: »Die nordamerikanischen Truppen kamen, aber anstatt die rechtmäßige Regierung zu verteidigen, rückten sie im Morgengrauen an und holten Präsident Aristide mit vorgehaltener Pistole aus seinem Haus, setzten ihn – praktisch entführt – in ein Flugzeug und brachten ihn in verschiedene Länder, bis sie ihn schließlich in der Zentralafrikanischen Republik sitzen ließen.« Durch diese Aktionen sei die Bush-Administration zu einer Gefahr für alle Völker Lateinamerikas geworden, warnte Chávez. Während eines Südafrika-Besuchs im September 2008 traf er in Pretoria auch mit Aristide zusammen. Das offizielle Kommuniqué der venezolanischen Regierung beschränkte sich damals darauf, daran zu erinnern, daß Aristide der erste demokratisch gewählte Präsident seines Landes gewesen sei.

    23.01.2010

    CHRISTENTUM(Eurozentrismus) und ISLAM(Arabismus) in Afrika - 150 Tote bei ihren rivalisierenden Anhängern*

    CHRISTENTUM(Eurozentrismus) und ISLAM(Arabismus) in Afrika - 150 Tote bei ihren rivalisierenden Anhängern*

    Bei Kämpfen zwischen muslimischen und christlichen Gruppen im zentralnigerianischen Bundesstaat Plateau wurden mehr Menschen getötet als bisher bekannt. Nachdem das Militär in den vergangenen Tagen die Kontrolle in der Hauptstadt Jos übernommen hat, gab es am Samstag Berichte über Massaker in umliegenden Dörfern.

    Nairobi/Abuja - Die Menschenrechtsorganisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) berichtete, in dem 30 Kilometer von Jos entfernten Dorf Kuru Karama seien 150 Leichen gefunden worden, die zum Teil in Brunnen und Abwasserkanäle geworfen worden waren. Dutzende Menschen würden in dem Dorf vermisst. Der Ortsvorsteher spricht von 60 Vermissten.

    Nach Angaben von Augenzeugen hatten bewaffnete Männer am Dienstag das überwiegend muslimische Dorf umzingelt und angegriffen. Fast alle Häuser und die drei Moscheen des Ortes seien niedergebrannt und zerstört worden. Die nigerianische Zeitung „Daily Trust“ berichtete am Samstag, auch in anderen Städten in dem Gebiet sei es zu Gewaltausbrüchen gekommen. Zahlreiche Menschen seien in ihren Häusern verbrannt, andere mit Macheten zerhackt worden. Weder die Regierung noch das nigerianische Rote Kreuz haben bisher zuverlässige Zahlen über die Opfer der jüngsten Unruhen, die am vergangenen Sonntag ausgebrochen waren. Menschenrechtler schätzen, dass fast 400 Menschen getötet wurden. Nach Informationen der nigerianischen Zeitung „This Day“ sind rund 40 000 Menschen aus Jos geflohen. Sie sind derzeit in provisorischen Flüchtlingscamps rund um die Stadt untergebracht.

    Schon 2001 und 2008 war es zu gewaltsamen Auseinandersetzungen in Jos gekommen. Die Regierung in Abuja hatte mehrere Kommissionen beauftragt, die Gründe für die Krise 2008 zu ermitteln, bei der mindestens 400 Menschen getötet worden waren. Die Berichte wurden nie veröffentlicht, niemand wurde vor Gericht gebracht. dpa/AFP/Tsp

    (Erschienen im gedruckten Tagesspiegel vom 24.01.2010)

    *Titeländerung bei Bois-Caiman-Redaktion

    H A I T I - SAK PASÉ _ by The Wellfare Poets




    H A I T I - SAK PASÉ _ by The Wellfare Poets

    From its monumental revolution and establishment as the first free Black nation in the Western Hemisphere, to its current crisis, Sak Pasé is a cry for liberty and freedom for a nation that has contributed so much to the world; Haiti. The song is played in Cuban Cha Cha Cha with a touch of Hip Hop, with usage of Haitian Creole. Some terms used are Sak Pasé, Nap Bulé, Liberté a Ayiti translated to What's up/Burning or I'm hot/Emancipate Haiti, respectively. Also mentioned is Bwa Kayman, the spiritual site in Haiti where Vodou Priest, Boukman held the ceremony that started the revolution in the 1790's, which is still inspiring ideas of freedom and revolution in the minds of millions around the world. www.welfarepoets.com

    Source: Youtube.com

    22 .01. 2010

    Site Admin

    HAITI: RACISM and POVERTY

    HAITI: RACISM and POVERTY

    by John Maxwell

    The people of Haiti are as poor as human beings can be.

    According to the statisticians of the World Bank and others who speculate about how many Anglos can dance on the head of a peon, Haiti may either be the second, third or fourth poorest country in the world.

    In Haiti’s case, statistics are irrelevant.

    When large numbers of people are reduced to eating dirt – earth, clay – it is impossible to imagine poverty any more absolute, any more desperate, any more inhuman and degrading.

    The chairman of the World Bank visited Haiti this past week. This man, Robert Zoellick, is an expert finance-capitalist, a former partner in the investment bankers Goldman Sachs, whose 22,000 “traders” last year averaged bonuses of more than $600,000 each.

    Goldman Sachs paid out over £18 billion in bonuses to its traders last year, about 50 percent more than the GDP of Haiti’s 8 million people.

    The chairman of Goldman took home more than $70 million and his lieutenants – as Zoellick once was – $40 million or more, each.

    It should be clear that someone like Robert Zoellick is likely to be totally bemused by Haiti when his entertainment allowance could probably feed the entire population for a day or two. It is not hard to understand that Mr. Zoellick cannot understand why Haiti needs debt relief.

    Haiti is now forced by the World Bank and its bloodsucking siblings like the IMF to pay more than $1 million a week to satisfy debts incurred by the Duvaliers and the post-Duvalier tyrannies. Haiti must repay this debt to prove its fitness for “help” from the Multilateral Financial Institutions (MFI).

    One million dollars a week would feed everybody in Haiti even if only at a very basic level – at least they would not have to eat earth patties. Instead the Haitians export this money to pay the salaries of such as Zoellick.

    [It wasn’t just sugar and coffee that made France wealthy when Haiti was the richest colony on earth; it was gold mining too. Racism, not a lack of agricultural and mineral resources, makes Haiti poor.]

    But Zoellick doesn’t see it that way. According to the World Bank’s website, the bank is in the business of eradicating poverty. At the rate it does that in Haiti, the bank, I estimate, will be in the poverty eradication business for another 18,000 years.

    The reason Haiti is in its present state is pretty simple: Canada, the United States and France, all of whom consider themselves civilized nations, colluded in the overthrow of the democratic government of Haiti four years ago. They did this for several excellent reasons:

    * Haiti 200 years ago defeated the world’s then major powers, France (twice), Britain and Spain, to establish its independence and to abolish plantation slavery. This was unforgivable.

    * Despite being bombed, strafed and occupied by the United States early in the past century, and despite the American endowment of a tyrannical and brutal Haitian army designed to keep the natives in their place, the Haitians insisted on re-establishing their independence. Having overthrown the Duvaliers and their successors, the Haitians proceeded to elect as president a little Black parish priest who had become their hero by defying the forces of evil and tyranny.

    * The new president of Haiti, Jean Bertrand Aristide, refused to sell out (privatize) the few assets owned by the government (the public utilities mainly).

    * Aristide also insisted that France owed Haiti more than $25 billion in repayment of blood money extorted from Haiti in the 19th century as alleged compensation for France’s loss of its richest colony and to allow Haiti to gain admission to world trade.

    * Aristide threatened the hegemony of a largely expatriate ruling class of so-called “elites” whose American connections allowed them to continue the parasitic exploitation and economic strip mining of Haiti following the American occupation.

    * Haiti, like Cuba, is believed to have in its exclusive economic zone huge submarine oil reserves, greater than the present reserves of the United States.

    * Haiti would make a superb base from which to attack Cuba.

    The American attitude to Haiti was historically based on American disapproval of a free Black state just off the coast of their slave-based plantation economy. This attitude was pithily expressed in Thomas Jefferson’s idea that a Black man was equivalent to three fifths of a white man. It was further apotheosized by Woodrow Wilson’s Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan, who expostulated to Wilson: “Imagine! Niggers speaking French!”

    The Haitians clearly did not know their place. In February 2004, Mr. John McCain’s International Republican Institute, assisted by Secretary of State Colin Powell, USAID and the CIA , kidnapped Aristide and his wife and transported them to the Central African Republic as “cargo” in a plane normally used to “render” terrorists for torture outsourced by the U.S. to Egypt, Morocco and Uzbekistan.

    Before Mr. Zoellick went to Haiti last week, the World Bank announced that Mr. Zoellick’s visit would “emphasize the Bank’s strong support for the country.” Mr. Zoellick added: “Haiti must be given a chance. The international community needs to step up to the challenge and support the efforts of the Haitian government and its people.”

    “If Robert Zoellick wants to give Haiti a chance, he should start by unconditionally cancelling Haiti’s debt,” says Brian Concannon of the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti. “Instead the World Bank – which was established to fight poverty – continues to insist on debt payments when Haitians are starving to death and literally mired in mud.”

    “After four hurricanes in a month and an escalating food crisis, it is outrageous that Haiti is being told it must wait six more months for debt relief,” said Jubilee USA Network National Coordinator Neil Watkins.

    “Haiti’s debt is both onerous and odious,” added Dr. Paul Farmer of Partners In Health. “The payments are literally killing people, as every dollar sent to Washington is a dollar Haiti could spend on healthcare, nutrition and feeding programs, desperately needed infrastructure and clean water. Half of the loans were given to the Duvaliers and other dictatorships and spent on presidential luxuries, not development programs for the poor. Mr. Zoellick should step up and support the Haitian government by canceling the debt now.”

    “Unconditional debt cancellation is the first step in addressing the humanitarian crisis in Haiti,” according to TransAfrica Forum Executive Director Nicole Lee. “There is also an urgent need for U.S. policy towards Haiti to shift from entrenching the country in future debt to supporting sustainable, domestic solutions for development.”

    The above quotations are taken from an appeal by the organizations represented above.

    Further comment is superfluous.

    Poverty and globalization

    President Jean Bertrand Aristide, now in enforced exile in South Africa, might be sardonically entertained by a new report just published by the world’s Club of the Rich, the OECD – Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

    This report, titled “Growing Unequal,” examines the accelerating trend toward economic inequality in the societies of the world’s richest countries.

    The report contains several mind-blowing discoveries which will, no doubt, amaze journalists and policy-makers in the Western hemisphere and keep them entertained for many years.

    The major finding is that globalization and free trade have hurt millions of people, particularly the poorest.

    Another ground-breaking discovery is that “work reduces poverty.”

    One of these days Jamaicans and other Caribbean people may decide to find out whether these theses are true and whether, if they are, we should have signed on to the new EPA with the European Union.

    If our ginnigogs were able and willing to read, they might become aware of a phenomenon called the “resource curse” which appears to condemn developing countries with enormous mineral wealth to misery, war, corruption and destitution.

    If our ginnigogs could or would read, they might find it useful to discover whether an acre of land under citrus or pumpkins is not more productive, sustainable and valuable than that same acre destroyed for bauxite.

    If our ginnigogs could or would read, they might become aware of the fate of the island of Nauru, “discovered” less than 200 years ago, mined for phosphate, returning a per capita national income rivaling Saudi Arabia’s two and three decades ago and now to be abandoned because the land has been mined to death and is destined to disappear shortly beneath the waves of global warming.
    Softly, softly, catchee monkee

    If our ginnigogs were able to read and willing and able to defend the interests of Jamaica and the Jamaican people, they might discover that bauxite mining will, within a relatively short time, contaminate all the water resources of Jamaica, destroy our cultural heritage, wipe out our priceless biological diversity, deprave our landscape and reduce those of us who survive to a state of penury and hopelessness. Goodbye tourism, goodbye farming, welcome hunger, welcome clay patties.

    According to the experts, if you drop a live lobster into a pot of boiling water the creature will make frenzied efforts to escape. If, on the other hand, you put him in a pot of cold water and bring it slowly to the boil, the lobster will perish without a struggle.

    Jamaica, on the atlas, is shaped a bit like a lobster.

    Bon appetit.

    Copyright © 2008 John Maxwell. The world renowned columnist for the Jamaica Observer, www.jamaicaobserver.com, may be reached at jankunnu@gmail.com. This column appeared at www.HaitiAction.net, the website of the Bay Area-based Haiti Action Committee.

    21.01.2010

    Source

    Why the U.S. owes Haiti billions: The briefest history

    Why the U.S. owes Haiti billions: The briefest history

    by Bill Quigley

    [This painting is titled “Capture of Fort Riviere, Haiti, 1915.” The artist is not named. The U.S. occupation of Haiti that followed the 1915 invasion lasted until 1934. – Photo: militaryphotos.net]

    Why does the U.S. owe Haiti billions? Former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell stated his foreign policy view as the “Pottery Barn rule.” That is, “If you break it, you own it.”

    The U.S. has worked to break Haiti for over 200 years. We owe Haiti. Not charity. We owe Haiti as a matter of justice. Reparations. And not the $100 million promised by President Obama either – that is Powerball money. The U.S. owes Haiti Billions – with a big B.

    The U.S. has worked for centuries to break Haiti. The U.S. has used Haiti like a plantation. The U.S. helped bleed the country economically since it freed itself, repeatedly invaded the country militarily, supported dictators who abused the people, used the country as a dumping ground for our own economic advantage, ruined their roads and agriculture and toppled popularly elected officials. The U.S. has even used Haiti like the old plantation owner and slipped over there repeatedly for sexual recreation.

    [Soldiers patrol the Haitian countryside during another U.S. military occupation, in 1994. – Photo: www.history.army.mil]

    Here is the briefest history of some of the major U.S. efforts to break Haiti

    In 1804, when Haiti achieved its freedom from France in the world’s first successful slave revolution, the United States refused to recognize the country. The U.S. continued to refuse recognition to Haiti for 60 more years. Why? Because the U.S. continued to enslave millions of its own citizens and feared recognizing Haiti would encourage slave revolution in the U.S.

    After the 1804 revolution, Haiti was the subject of a crippling economic embargo by France and the U.S. U.S. sanctions lasted until 1863. France ultimately used its military power to force Haiti to pay reparations for the slaves who were freed. The reparations were 150 million francs. (France sold the entire Louisiana territory to the U.S. for 80 million francs!)

    Haiti was forced to borrow money from banks in France and the U.S. to pay reparations to France. A major loan from the U.S. to pay off the French was finally paid off in 1947. The current value of the money Haiti was forced to pay to French and U.S. banks? Over $20 Billion – with a big B.

    [Five days after U.S. Marines kidnapped Haiti’s beloved and democratically elected President Jean Bertrand Aristide in a U.S.-backed coup, a young Haitian watches as occupying Marines take up positions in Port au Prince. – Photo: Getty Images]

    The U.S. occupied and ruled Haiti by force from 1915 to 1934. President Woodrow Wilson sent troops to invade in 1915. Revolts by Haitians were put down by U.S. military – killing over 2,000 in one skirmish alone. For the next 19 years, the U.S. controlled customs in Haiti, collected taxes and ran many governmental institutions. How many billions were siphoned off by the U.S. during these 19 years?

    From 1957 to 1986 Haiti was forced to live under U.S.-backed dictators “Papa Doc” and “Baby Doc” Duvalier. The U.S. supported these dictators economically and militarily because they did what the U.S. wanted and were politically “anti-communist” – now translatable as against human rights for their people. Duvalier stole millions from Haiti and ran up hundreds of millions in debt that Haiti still owes. Ten thousand Haitians lost their lives. Estimates say that Haiti owes $1.3 billion in external debt and that 40 percent of that debt was run up by the U.S.-backed Duvaliers.

    Thirty years ago Haiti imported no rice. Today Haiti imports nearly all its rice. Though Haiti was the sugar growing capital of the Caribbean, it now imports sugar as well. Why? The U.S. and the U.S. dominated world financial institutions – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – forced Haiti to open its markets to the world. Then the U.S. dumped millions of tons of U.S.-subsidized rice and sugar into Haiti – undercutting their farmers and ruining Haitian agriculture. By ruining Haitian agriculture, the U.S. has forced Haiti into becoming the third largest world market for U.S. rice. Good for U.S. farmers, bad for Haiti.

    [Terrorizing the people into submission was the apparent goal of the U.S. Marines’ brutal and bloody occupation of Haiti following the U.S.-backed coup in 2004. As always, the people resisted.]

    In 2002, the U.S. stopped hundreds of millions of dollars in loans to Haiti which were to be used for, among other public projects like education, roads. These are the same roads which relief teams are having so much trouble navigating now!

    In 2004, the U.S. again destroyed democracy in Haiti when they supported the coup against Haiti’s elected President Aristide.

    Haiti is even used for sexual recreation just like the old time plantations. Check the news carefully and you will find numerous stories of abuse of minors by missionaries, soldiers and charity workers. Plus there are the frequent sexual vacations taken to Haiti by people from the U.S. and elsewhere. What is owed for that? What value would you put on it if it were your sisters and brothers?

    U.S.-based corporations have for years been teaming up with Haitian elite to run sweatshops teeming with tens of thousands of Haitians who earn less than $2 a day.

    The Haitian people have resisted the economic and military power of the U.S. and others ever since their independence. Like all of us, Haitians made their own mistakes as well. But U.S. power has forced Haitians to pay great prices – deaths, debt and abuse.

    It is time for the people of the U.S. to join with Haitians and reverse the course of U.S.-Haitian relations.

    This brief history shows why the U.S. owes Haiti Billions – with a big B. This is not charity. This is justice. This is reparations. The current crisis is an opportunity for people in the U.S. to own up to our country’s history of dominating Haiti and to make a truly just response.

    For more on the history of exploitation of Haiti by the U.S., see Paul Farmer, “The Uses of Haiti”; Peter Hallward, “Damming the Flood”; and Randall Robinson, “An Unbroken Agony.”

    Bill Quigley is legal director for the Center for Constitutional Rights and a long-time Haiti human rights advocate. He can be reached at Quigley77@gmail.com


    21.01.2010

    How the U.S. impoverished H A I T I

    How the U.S. impoverished H A I T I

    Author’s update: The horrific disaster that has befallen Haiti is perhaps unprecedented in the Western Hemisphere. Estimates now say that perhaps hundreds of thousands have died as a result of the Jan. 12 earthquake. The media have constantly recited, as a mantra, that Haiti’s weak infrastructure and poor quality of construction account for the large number of deaths. The implication is that Haitians are unable to govern and build a reliable, sustainable society.

    The truth of the matter is that, left to their own efforts, Haitians would have been more than able to build a reliable democracy with adequate infrastructure. But they have never been allowed to do so – not by Europe and certainly not by the United States.

    The article below was written in 2003. It attempts to describe how Haiti has been by design maintained as the most impoverished nation in our hemisphere.

    Contact your congressional representatives and urge them to move Congress to increase aid to Haiti. For more on direct aid and action, go to How to show your solidarity with heroic Haiti: resources, where to send donations and to Haitiaction.net.

    How the U.S. impoverished H A I T I

    by Jean Damu

    Though the demand by Haiti for reparations from France is just, it obscures the role the United States played in the process to impoverish Haiti – a role that continues to this day.

    Today Haiti is a severely indebted country whose debt-to-export ratio is nearly 300 percent, far above what is considered sustainable even by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Both institutions are dominated by the U.S.

    In 1980 Haiti’s debt was $302 million. Since then it has more than tripled to $1.1 billion, approximately 40 percent of the nation’s gross national product. Last year Haiti paid more in debt service than it did on medical services for the people.

    Haitian officials say nearly 80 percent of the current debt was accumulated by the regimes of Francois and Jean-Claude Duvalier, Papa Doc and Baby Doc. Both regimes operated under the benign gaze of the United States that has had a long and sordid history of keeping Haiti well within its sphere of economic and political influence.

    It is now well known that the primary source of Haiti’s chronic impoverishment is the reparations it was forced to pay to the former plantation owners who left following the 1804 revolution. Some of the white descendants of the former plantation owners, who now live in New Orleans, still have the indemnity coupons issued by France. So in fact, at least part of the reparations paid by Haiti went toward the development of the United States.

    In 1825 Haiti was forced to borrow 24 million francs from private French banks to begin paying off the crippling indemnity debt. Haiti only acknowledged this debt in exchange for French recognition of her independence, a principle that would continue to characterize Haiti’s international relationships.

    These indemnity payments caused continual financial emergencies and political upheavals. In a 51-year period, Haiti had 16 different presidents – new presidents often coming to power at the head of a rebel army.

    Nevertheless, Haiti always made the indemnity payments – and, following those, the bank loan payments – on time. The 1915 intervention by the Marines on behalf of U.S. financial interests changed all of that, however.

    The prelude to the 1915 U.S. intervention began in 1910 when the National Bank of Haiti, founded in 1881 with French capital and entrusted from the start with the administration of the Haitian treasury, disappeared. It was replaced by the financial institution known as the National Bank of the Republic of Haiti.

    Part of the capital of the new national bank was subscribed by the National City Bank of New York, signaling, for the first time, U.S. interest in the financial affairs of Haiti.

    The motivation for the original U.S. financial interest in Haiti was the schemes of several U.S. corporations with ties to National City Bank to build a railroad system there. In order for these corporations – including the W.R. Grace Corp. – to protect their investments, they pressured President Woodrow Wilson and his secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan, to find ways to stabilize the Haitian economy, namely by taking a controlling interest in the Haitian custom houses, the main source of revenue for the government.

    After Secretary of State Bryan was fully briefed on Haiti by his advisers, he exclaimed, “Dear me, think of it! Niggers speaking French.”

    Ironically, however, Bryan, a longtime anti-imperialist, was against any exploitative relationship between the U.S. and Haiti or any other nation in the Western Hemisphere. In fact he had long called for canceling the debts of smaller nations as a means by which they could normally grow and develop. Not surprisingly, Bryan’s views were not well received in Washington or on Wall Street.

    Due to the near total ignorance at the State Department and in Washington generally about Haiti, Bryan was forced to rely on anyone who had first hand information. That person turned out to be Roger L. Farnham, one of the few people thoroughly familiar with Haitian affairs.

    Farnham was thoroughly familiar with Haitian affairs because he was vice-president of the National City Bank of New York and of the new National Bank of the Republic of Haiti and president of the National Railway of Haiti. In spite of the secretary of state’s hostility to Wall Street and Farnham’s obvious conflict of interest, Bryan leaned heavily on Farnham for information and advice.

    As vice president of both National City Bank and the National Bank of the Republic of Haiti, Farnham played a cat and mouse game with the Haitian legislature and president. Alternately, he would threaten direct U.S. intervention or to withhold government funds if they did not turn over control of the Haitian custom houses to National City Bank. In defense of Haitian independence, lawmakers refused at every juncture.

    Finally, in 1914, with the outbreak of World War I, Farnham was able to convince Washington that France and Germany posed direct threats to the U.S. by their presence in Haiti. Each had a small colony of business people there.

    In December of 1914, Farnham arranged for the U.S. Marines to come ashore at Port Au Prince, march into the new National Bank of Haiti and steal two strongboxes containing $500,000 in Haitian currency and sail to New York, where the money was placed in New York City Bank. This made the Haitian government totally dependent on Farnham for finances with which to operate.

    The final and immediate decision to intervene in Haiti came in July of 1915 with yet another overthrow of a Haitian president, this time the bloody demise of Vilbrun Guillaume Sam.

    For the next 19 years, the U.S. Marine Corps wielded supreme authority throughout Haiti, often dispensing medicines and food as mild forms of pacification. Within several years, however, charges of massacres of Haitian peasants were made against the military as Haitians revolted against the road building programs that required forced labor.

    In one such incident at Fort Reviere, the Marines killed 51 Haitians without sustaining any casualties themselves. Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt awarded Major Smedley D. Butler the Congressional Medal of Honor. That’s not unlike the awarding of Medals of Honor to the “heroes” of the massacre at Wounded Knee, in which hundreds of Sioux Native Americans were slaughtered in 1890.

    Reports of U.S. military abuses against the Haitians became so widespread that NAACP official James Weldon Johnson headed a delegation to investigate the charges, which they deemed to be true.

    While the U.S. occupation was not without some successes – the health care system was improved and the currency was stabilized – it was in other economic spheres where the most damage was done. For the entire 19-year duration of the intervention, maximum attention was given to paying off Haiti’s U.S. creditors, with little to no attention given to developing the economy.

    In 1922 former Marine Brigade Commander John Russell was named High Commissioner of Haiti, a post he held until the final days of the occupation. Under Russell’s influence, all political dissent was stifled and revenue from the custom houses was turned over, often months ahead of schedule, to Haiti’s U.S. bond creditors, who had assumed loans originally extended to Haiti to pay off the French plantation owners’ reparations!

    By 1929, however, with the Western world’s economic depression and the lowering of living standards throughout Haiti, serious student strikes and worker revolts, combined with Wall Street’s inability to lure serious business investors there, Washington decided it was time to end the military occupation. When then President Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Haiti in 1934 to announce the pullout, he was the first head of a foreign nation in Haiti’s history to extend a visit.

    Despite the American military pullout, U.S. financial administrators continued to dominate the Haitian economy until the final debt on the earlier loans was retired in 1947.

    Soon after the U.S. withdrew from Haiti, a Black consciousness movement of sorts took hold that was the precursor of the “negritude” movement popularized by Aimee Cesaire and Leopold Senghor. Francois Duvalier, an early believer in “negritude,” came to power in the late 1950s, popularizing ideas that resonated with a population that had withstood a white foreign occupation for many years.

    By the time Duvalier grabbed the presidency of the world’s first Black republic established by formerly enslaved peoples, Haiti had experienced more than 150 years of chronic impoverishment and discriminatory lending policies by the world’s leading financial institutions and powers. The economic forecast for Haiti has not improved, even with the democratic election of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, since he has been consistently demonized in the U.S. and world press.

    [Body of Charlemagne Peralte-leader of Haitian resistance to US occupation of 1915 to 1934. The US Marines paraded his body around the country after assassinating him.]

    Jean Damu is the former western regional representative for N’COBRA, National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America, and a former member of the International Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, taught Black Studies at the University of New Mexico, has traveled and written extensively in the Caribbean and Africa and currently serves as a member of the Steering Committee of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration. Email him at jdamu2@yahoo.com [5]. This story first appeared in the San Francisco Bay View in 2003.

    21 .01. 2010

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    WHY H A I T I? WHY NOW?

    WHY H A I T I? WHY NOW?

    by J. Damu(March 2, 2004)

    Black people across America and throughout the world, in fact all people who love and honor democracy and social justice, have to be outraged at what was surely the cloaked in darkness gunpoint kidnapping of Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide by U.S. militarists, this past Sunday, February 29.
    We must speak as one to denounce this latest "lebensraum" (living space) foreign policy of the Bush administration, which is beginning to resemble more and more that of the German nazi era.
    Despite this moral outrage committed against the long suffering people of Haiti, the first anywhere to successfully rise up against their slave masters, an act of defiance for which they've never been forgiven, the questions asked by many protestors, as hundreds streamed from San Francisco's underground rail system to demonstrate against Bush's latest crime, were, "Why Haiti?" and "Why now?"
    Both questions can be answered simply and succinctly with just two words-Cuba, Venezuela.
    The removal of Aristide has been a long simmering coup in the making that dates back at least to the Clinton presidency and the refusal of Congress to release promised funding to the economically devastated island. However the timing and execution of the Haitian coup has to be placed within a regional and world context. The coup, or extra-democratic process, which brought George Bush to the White House, allowed him to hand over U.S. foreign policy decision making, as it effects the Western hemisphere, to naturalized U.S. Cubans dedicated to the overthrow of the Cuban revolution.
    Their policies, although geared to the overthrow of Fidel Castro and socialism in Cuba, converge neatly with U.S. designs to destabilize the Caribbean and Central-South American region and insure U.S. supremacy and access to Venezuela's all important oil.
    Therefore it is no surprise Otto Reich's fingerprints are all over this weeks kidnapping of President Aristide. Otto Reich, you will re-call is the Under- Secretary of State for the Western Hemisphere who helped to orchestrate the short-lived kidnapping and ouster of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez. That kidnapping was undone when the people rose up and re- installed Chavez because the perpetrators of that kidnapping had failed to remove Chavez completely from the country. Not to make the same mistake twice.
    In an overall strategy that parallels the world wide concept of the Department of Defense to simultaneously fighting one or one and half wars to extend U.S. imperial power to control energy sources overseas, under the cover of fighting terrorism; hard line, reactionary Cubans within the U.S. diplomatic community have been handed near carte blanche powers to destabilize progressive regimes in the Western hemisphere.
    In addition to Otto Reich, who as a diplomatic appointee to Venezuela during the Reagan administration helped to arrange the transferring and releasing to the streets of Miami terrorist Orlando Bosch, mastermind of the 1976 blowing up of the Cuban airliner is:
    Reich's right-hand man Roger Noriega a former Jesse Helms protégé who recently served as U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States and now is also to the State Department's Western Hemisphere Bureau and:
    John Negroponte, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, who also as a Reagan appointee served as U.S. ambassador to Honduras and officially covered up if not actually facilitated the dearth squads there in support of that country's actions against Nicaragua's Sandanista government.
    There can be little doubt all three of these men, with common roots in the hard line Florida community of Cuban exiles and terrorists inside and outside the U.S. played key roles in facilitating the events in Haiti this week.
    For instance it widely known that the thugs and gangsters who make up the leadership of the so-called Haitian rebels, Guy Phillippe, Emanuel Constant and Jodel Chamblain were all trained at the U.S. held Manta airbase in Ecuador.
    This military installation, developed with U.S. funds ostensibly to help launch strikes in the war against the drug trade, is being used as a training and staging area for paramilitary and military operations in the region, much as Panama's Howard airbase was previously used, according to former U.S. military's Southern Command chief, General Charles Wilhelm. Published news accounts say all three paid Haitian terrorists occupied the same house at Manta airbase during their training there and they admit to being on the CIA payroll for some years now.
    Of course there is an entire constellation of Haitian and U.S. characters and organizations as well as international policy and funding organizations that helped create the machinery and climate for Aristide's kidnapping and serve to diffuse attention from the Cuban right wing policy makers. The Democratic Convergence, the Group 184, the Republican Party controlled National Endowment for Democracy, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank. maneuverings are all well documented. The history of U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, James Foley (he who led the pre-dawn kidnapping raid against President Aristide) ties to KLA terrorist organization in Kosovo is also well known.
    However, it is the existence in the United States and within the naturalized Cuban community a fascistic, hard line element exemplified by Reich, Negroponte and Noriega, that not only denied the U.S. people a democratically elected president but now has successfully overthrown the democratically elected President Aristide and stage manages and facilitates the de-stabilization of the Western Hemisphere.
    The overthrow of Aristide was relatively simple to physically accomplish-but the larger message was to Cuba and Venezuela and even to Brazil-that dangerous times lie immediately ahead.
    Finally African-Americans in particular must express outrage and shame at the complicity of Black U.S. foreign policy spokespeople Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security Advisor, Condoleeza Rice (Otto Reich's immediate superior during the Venezuela coup attempt by the way) in this great crime against the Haitian people. As if capitulating to political reaction by endorsing the U.S. invasion of Iraq were not enough, both have now become hand puppets for the Miami Cuban pro-fascists who would extend U.S. imperial policy against our brothers and sisters throughout the hemisphere.

    [J.Damu is the acting Western Regional Representative for NCOBRA, the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America. For more information about how you can help Haiti or to become involved please contact the Haiti Action Committee at (510) 483-7481 or write HAC, P.O. Box 2218, Berkeley, Ca. 94702 or visit their website www.haitiaction.org.]

    portside (the left side in nautical parlance) is a news, discussion and debate service of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism. It aims to provide varied material of interest to people on the left.


    21.01.2010

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    White Supremacy and Martin Luther King - We Remember Dr. KING -January, 15.[ 1929-1968]

    White Supremacy and Martin Luther King - We Remember Dr. KING -January, 15.[ 1929-1968]




    "...Yes I´m Black and beautiful."
    -- Dr. King



    Bois-Caiman-Redaktion

    17 .01. 2010